Defendant Marvin Clyde Lincoln appeals from a judgment entered in the District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri 1 upon a jury verdict finding him guilty of two counts of mailing threatening communications in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 876. Defendant was sentenced to a term of twelve years imprisonment for Count I and an additional term of three years imprisonment for Count III, said sentences to run consecutively. 2 Count II was dismissed.
For reversal defendant argues (1) the district court erred in accepting the jury verdict finding him guilty as to Count I because the attempted extortion was impossible and (2) the letter that formed the basis of Count III was a communication protected by the first amendment. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
At trial the parties stipulated that two letters (Exhibits 1A and 2A) were received in the mail by the Clerk of the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. It was further stipulated that the letters and envelopes were written and addressed by defendant and that defendant’s fingerprints appeared on the letters and envelopes. Defendant’s name and prison registration *381 number appeared on thе outside of the envelopes. Special agents of the FBI testified for the government. Defendant in Exhibit 1A, dated September 27,1977, threatened to kill the judges оf the Eighth Circuit. This letter also contained bitter references to defendant’s dissatisfaction with the appellate process. We note that defеndant’s appeal from an unrelated conviction had just been affirmed by the Eighth Circuit. Defendant in Exhibit 2A, received February 24, 1978, demanded payment of $700,000 to secure the release of specified members of the Charles Manson family and threatened to kill the judges unless his demands were satisfied within ten days.
Defendant testified on his own behalf and admitted writing these particular letters as well as several other threatening letters. Defendant denied any intent to threaten any person or to extort money and stated that the letters were written in an attempt to secure a transfer to another institution and to remain in prоtective custody. Defendant testified that the letters were unsealed and were not deposited in a prisoner’s mail box but left in-between the bars of his prison cell. Defendant also testified that at the times he wrote the letters he understood he was under central monitoring, a status of close supervisiоn and isolation which includes the censoring of prisoner mail, and never thought the letters would actually be mailed. Defendant was aware, however, thаt letters left in-between the bars of his cell were picked up by guards as part of the prison’s normal procedures.
As developed at trial, defendant had apparently cooperated with prison authorities at the Missouri State Penitentiary in a narcotics investigation and feared for his life because several inmates at Leavenworth had been the focus of that investigation. In addition, there was evidence defendant had been assaulted several times while in prison. For these reasons, defendant wanted to be transferred and isolated from the general prison population and to achieve that end had written the letters.
Defendant first argues the district court erred in accepting the jury verdict finding him guilty as to Count I because the аttempted extortion was impossible. Defendant recognizes that this Circuit has held factual impossibility is not a defense, see
United States v. Frazier,
The offense of mailing threatening communications requires proof of only two elements: (1) that the dеfendant wrote a threatening letter and (2) that the defendant knowingly caused the letter to be forwarded by the United States mail.
See United States
v.
Sirhan,
Furthermore, the question of defendant’s intent was an issue of fact for the jury to resolve.
See United States v. Maisonet,
Defendant’s second argument is that the letter written Septеmber, 27, 1977, which formed the basis for Count III, was a communication protected by the first amendment.
See Watts v. United States,
The facts presented herein are distinguishable from those presented in
Barcley.
In
Barcley
Judge Bright required the government to furnish additional evidence that the language constitutеd a threat because the alleged threat was ambiguous and raised the question of first amendment protection.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable H. Kenneth Wangelin, United States District Judge for the Eastern Distriсt of Missouri.
. The total sentence of fifteen years imprisonment, although within the statutory maximum, seems rather harsh in light of the circumstances shown at trial. It is, however, not the function of this Court to substitute its judgment for that of the district court with respect to sentencing.
E. g., United States v. Sand,
